The fictionalization of morality police in Saudi novel: a new historicist approach

Abstract The morality police have always inspired different, often conflicting, feelings in Saudi society. While many have supported the morality police, others saw their old privileges as problematic. Representations of and attitudes toward the morality police have been reflected in Saudi fiction i...

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Main Author: Mohammed Albalawi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2025-06-01
Series:Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-05237-5
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author Mohammed Albalawi
author_facet Mohammed Albalawi
author_sort Mohammed Albalawi
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The morality police have always inspired different, often conflicting, feelings in Saudi society. While many have supported the morality police, others saw their old privileges as problematic. Representations of and attitudes toward the morality police have been reflected in Saudi fiction in a broad multitude of works. However, research on the contextualization of the morality police in Saudi literature is often overlooked by literary critics. This study adopts a New Historicist approach and consults select literary works to examine fictional depictions of the morality police. The focus will be limited to three Saudi novels spanning from 2005 to 2009: Abdo Khal’s Immorality (2005), Samar Almogren’s Women of Vice (2008), and Yousef Al-Mohaimeed’s Where Pigeons Don’t Fly (2009/2014). The study attempts to show how Saudi literature offers representations of the morality police that can allow for a more profound insight into their role and its many implications.
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spelling doaj-art-9bfabf932fad41aa897644cec9fb10312025-08-20T02:10:30ZengSpringer NatureHumanities & Social Sciences Communications2662-99922025-06-011211910.1057/s41599-025-05237-5The fictionalization of morality police in Saudi novel: a new historicist approachMohammed Albalawi0University of JeddahAbstract The morality police have always inspired different, often conflicting, feelings in Saudi society. While many have supported the morality police, others saw their old privileges as problematic. Representations of and attitudes toward the morality police have been reflected in Saudi fiction in a broad multitude of works. However, research on the contextualization of the morality police in Saudi literature is often overlooked by literary critics. This study adopts a New Historicist approach and consults select literary works to examine fictional depictions of the morality police. The focus will be limited to three Saudi novels spanning from 2005 to 2009: Abdo Khal’s Immorality (2005), Samar Almogren’s Women of Vice (2008), and Yousef Al-Mohaimeed’s Where Pigeons Don’t Fly (2009/2014). The study attempts to show how Saudi literature offers representations of the morality police that can allow for a more profound insight into their role and its many implications.https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-05237-5
spellingShingle Mohammed Albalawi
The fictionalization of morality police in Saudi novel: a new historicist approach
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
title The fictionalization of morality police in Saudi novel: a new historicist approach
title_full The fictionalization of morality police in Saudi novel: a new historicist approach
title_fullStr The fictionalization of morality police in Saudi novel: a new historicist approach
title_full_unstemmed The fictionalization of morality police in Saudi novel: a new historicist approach
title_short The fictionalization of morality police in Saudi novel: a new historicist approach
title_sort fictionalization of morality police in saudi novel a new historicist approach
url https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-05237-5
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